bmattock
Veteran
Back in the 1950's, camera and lens technology had not reached the pinnacles they have today. There were no computers crunching numbers to determine what the optimum lens design was; no CNC lathes or mills churning out parts made to incredible tolerances. It was just people with mechanical tools, a great work ethic, and good math, and somehow it all worked.
I took this photo on Christmas Eve in my living room. The camera I used was a Zeiss-Ikon Contina III 35mm non-rangefinder camera (but I put an external rangefinder on top, so there). It was made in about 1955, and it has a Pantar 45mm f2.8 lens (I presume a Tessar design). I loaded it with Kodak Gold 200, put it on a tripod with a remote shutter release, and set the f-stop at f22. I set the shutter speed to "B" and held the cable for the count of 60 seconds.
Not as sharp as say, a Carl Zeiss T* or a Leica Summarit or what-have-you - but I am pleased with the results.
So I thought I'd post this little photo for you. Hope everyone had a great Christmas holiday!
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
I took this photo on Christmas Eve in my living room. The camera I used was a Zeiss-Ikon Contina III 35mm non-rangefinder camera (but I put an external rangefinder on top, so there). It was made in about 1955, and it has a Pantar 45mm f2.8 lens (I presume a Tessar design). I loaded it with Kodak Gold 200, put it on a tripod with a remote shutter release, and set the f-stop at f22. I set the shutter speed to "B" and held the cable for the count of 60 seconds.
Not as sharp as say, a Carl Zeiss T* or a Leica Summarit or what-have-you - but I am pleased with the results.
So I thought I'd post this little photo for you. Hope everyone had a great Christmas holiday!
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
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